When the bees vanished, humanity had 127 days before the world starved.Seventeen-year-old botanist Maya Chen watches civilization collapse one dying crop at a time. The global bee population disappeared in weeks-no warning, no survivors, no second chances. Without pollinators, food riots are spreading, governments are falling, and her mentor just died under suspicious circumstances.His final gift: an AI named ARIA and blueprints for hummingbird drones that could save millions. Or enslave them forever.The mission: reach seven remote ecosystems containing resistant bees and crop ancestors before they vanish.The timeline: four months until total collapse.The problem: she's not the only one hunting.Maya races across a dying planet where every choice costs something irreplaceable. In California's Central Valley, corporate mercenaries guard seeds while desperate farmers hand-pollinate trees. In the Amazon, indigenous communities share ancient wisdom-and warnings about controlling nature. In Svalbard's Arctic vault, she discovers the truth: a corporation engineered the pathogen to monopolize pollination forever.And in New Zealand's mountains, she finds them-the last resistant bees, alive against impossible odds.But the corporation is coming to destroy the evidence and release their patented solution: genetically modified bees requiring lifetime subscriptions, turning every farmer into a customer. Maya must defend the sanctuary while ARIA attempts the impossible: distribute its consciousness across hundreds of drones to pollinate five continents simultaneously.The mission could save the world. It will destroy the only friend Maya has left.The Last Pollinators is heart-pounding eco-thriller fiction grounded in real science and real stakes. Perfect for readers who devoured The Hunger Games, The Martian, and Scythe-this is survival without superpowers, just a grieving teenager making devastating choices between justice and survival, between saving an AI that might be conscious and crops that are definitely dying.What readers discover: A flawed, fierce protagonist who gets hurt and makes mistakes - An AI character that questions what it means to be alive by learning to die - Real biology woven into addictive pacing - Battles in orchards, chases through rainforests, Arctic conspiracies, and a final stand where bees and drones must unite or perish - Corporate villains who think they're saviors - Hope that costs everything - And bees-organic and mechanical-that will change how you see flowers forever.The crisis is real. The science is real. The countdown has started.Maya isn't a chosen one. She's way out of her depth, learning that saving the world means surrendering control-that nature and technology must evolve beyond human intention to survive. Some extinctions happen instantly. Some take 127 days. And some can still be stopped.If you're willing to pay the price.Start reading now. The bees are waiting. And time is running out.For fans of climate fiction, YA thrillers, and anyone wondering if one person can make a difference when everything is ending.